T – Once again, very hoppy but not particularly in the good way. It starts off right away with bitter hops with a tremendous mix of flavors including grass, grapefruit, orange, and earthy and floral flavors. Some of the peppery yeast comes in at the finish once the bitterness fades. The malt really isn’t noticeable. It doesn’t taste bad, but all the flavors don’t exactly blend well.

F – Light-medium-bodied, tremendous carbonation, a creamy and effervescent mouthfeel, and a mildly bitter, mildly spicy, and very dry finish. Earthy, floral, and grassy hop flavors linger for a bit.

O – This is a decent beer but I think it suffers from the idea that I think went on here. It seems like they came up with a beer that they wanted to call “Ten” because it had 10 different grains and 10 different hops. While that’s a pretty cool idea, I don’t know if they thought about the flavor profile that can happen if you use 10 completely different varieties of hops. You just get a big amalgam of flavors that don’t quite come together. I may be way off here, but it seems like they came up with the name before they came up with the beer – never really a good idea (first-hand experience with homebrewing). Nevertheless, it is not a bad-tasting beer and it’s very drinkable. I had never heard of Freedom’s Edge before trying this one and I never thought I would try a beer from Wyoming without going there myself. Thanks for the opportunity to try this one, Jared!

First whiff off the bottle was plastic, no good. beer is super hazy yellow-orange, ok head. Aroma is plastic, malts, plastic, Flavor is plastic phenols, citrus, not good at all. Overall this beer sucks and maybe its old but it still should not taste like plastic. Drainpour.